Hiroshima

For the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Atomic bomb was nothing short of cataclysmic. But Americans were shown a sanitized version of the devastation, and for many years, photographic evidence of the real damage was locked away. The final part of our three part series on the Atomic Cover-up.

This historic essay published in the New Yorker from August 1946 recounts the story of six survivors of the atomic blast at Hiroshima, 8:15 am August 6, 1945. This is an incredible piece of journalism, offering much perspective on nuclear

Via OccupyWallSt:
(un)Occupy Albuquerque and allies are organizing a civil disobedience action on Hiroshima Day, August 6th, in Los Alamos as part of the wider three-day events planned by the Occupy Santa Fe Nuke Free Now Coalition. See

Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann explained her support for waterboarding Monday by likening it to the decision to drop nuclear bombs on Japan during World War II.
At Saturday's CBS News/National Journal Republican presidential

On a CSPAN broadcast posted by Rep. Nunes on 03/21/10, during President Obama's health care debate, Devin Nunes defended racist tea part protesters saying, "people that have every right to say what they want."

On Tuesday's The 700 Club, Pat Robertson launched into a homophobic rant against the LGBTQ community, blaming them for all the problems we face as a nation saying, "The people run amok and we have gone to the point where God will give [...]